Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Pekka Airaksinen and Ponytail Albums on N&B Research Digest

Pekka Airaksinen (b. 1945) is best known as the musical mastermind behind the Finnish ultra-radical and scandalous performance group/proto-noise band The Sperm of the late 1960’s. During the new millenium he has also acquired international recognition as an early pioneer of electronic experimental music. On his new album "Mahagood" Airaksinen turns to his first musical loves – electronic music of the 1950’s and jazz – as sources for sampling. The result is an improvisatory collage in which his synthetic sound of recent years combines organically with layers of history.

Simultaneously N&B Research Digest re-releases the 2003 double-CD compilation "Madam I'm Adam" produced for Love Records as a download-only album. The compilation has one CD’s worth of Airaksinen’s work from 1968–2003 plus the same compositions remixed by Nurse With Wound (his first champion outside of Finland), Mira Calix, Philipp Quehenberger, Curd Duca, Simon Wickham-Smith, Es, Notchnoi Prospekt, Anton Nikkilä, and others. ”Madam I’m Adam delivers on its stated goals: a reasonably priced introduction to the history and continued influence of one of the underground’s most unique bodies of work.” (Jonathan Dean, Brainwashed, USA)

Ponytail aka Samuli Tanner is one of the bright young talents of Helsinki’s musical underground and is internationally probably best known as one half of the dubstep production team Clouds. Ponytail’s music could be called experimental dubstep or hip hop, but one that’s infused with a refined anti-musicianship and roughness that has similarities with Pekka Airaksinen's approach. In Ponytail’s case the resistance to commercial slickness originates in punk rock and Finnish agrarian folk music. Samuli spent most of his teens in punk groups, and he says that his music’s out-of-tuneness and wayward rhythms have first of all to do with punk spirit, but also the traditional ”pelimanni spirit” of Finnish folk music – Tanner’s family has spawned folk musicians for several generations. Charles Mingus and other jazz innovators of the past are sources of inspiration as well, and another trait shared with Pekka Airaksinen is the way both musicians borrow elements and sample liberally from an eclectic variety of electronic genres, but without paying dues to the conventions and meanings of the originals, which results in shockingly new and personal music.

"Themes For Cops" and Pekka Airaksinen’s "Mahagood" are released as download-only albums by N&B Research Digest, but small CD-R print runs will be produced for the album launch concert held in Helsinki’s Lepakkomies club on June 10th. Other acts of the evening are Pasilian savut, whose live album will be released by NBRD in August, and DJ Anton Nikkilä.